Sneha Girap (Editor)

Elizabeth Whelan

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Name
  
Elizabeth Whelan


Alma mater
  
Harvard University

Elizabeth Whelan acshorgwpcontentuploads201307whelanIMG7060

Institutions
  
American Council on Science and Health

Died
  
September 11, 2014, Manahawkin, Stafford Township, New Jersey, United States

Institution
  
American Council on Science and Health

Fields
  
Epidemiology, Food science

Books
  
Toxic terror, Preventing cancer, The complete guide to p, Panic in the pantry, A baby? Maybe

Dr elizabeth whelan discussing children s health and environmental chemicals on cnn


Elizabeth M. Whelan (; December 4, 1943 – September 11, 2014) was an American epidemiologist best known for challenging government regulations of the consumer products, food, and pharmaceuticals industries that arose from what she said was faulty science. In 1978, she founded the American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) to provide a formal foundation for her work. She also wrote, or co-wrote, more than 20 books and over 300 articles in scientific journals and lay publications.

Contents

Elizabeth Whelan httpsstatic01nytcomimages20140918usWHEL

Whelan's advocacy encompassed numerous high-profile cases, including the so-called Delaney Clause used by the Food and Drug Administration to eliminate use of the sweetener saccharin. She was often criticized as a shill for industry, for example with respect to pesticides, growth hormones for dairy cows, PCBs, hydraulic fracturing, and Michael Bloomberg's crusade against sugary drinks. She was critical of many public interest groups that she said frightened people away from making personal choices in cases where no danger had been proved.

Rose of tralee 2013 elizabeth whelan


Personal

Before her marriage, her name was Elizabeth Ann Murphy. Born in Manhattan in 1943, she was the daughter of Marion Barret Murphy and Joseph F. Murphy and had two brothers, Kevin and Brian Murphy. Her father was a lawyer and the Commission of Insurance of New Jersey from 1982 to 1984.

Whelan was married to Stephen T. Whelan. They had one child, Christine Moyers, and two grandchildren.

Whelan enjoyed swimming and swam laps almost every day of her life until her health prevented it. Whelan was also a member of the Lotos Club, a gentleman's club, which began admitting women in 1977, with a literary and artistic bent.

Education

She earned a bachelor's degree from Connecticut College and went on to receive a master's degree in public health from Yale University and both a master's in science and a Ph.D. from Harvard University, in 1971. After graduating Elizabeth Whelan began work studying modern marriages and family relationships. She published several papers on the subject. That work lead to her first book, Sex and sensibility: a new look at being a woman. The next year she published two more, A Baby?... Maybe: A Guide to Making the Most Fateful Decision of Your Life and Making Sense Out of Sex: A New Look at Being a Man. The latter was cowritten with her father-in-law, Stephen T. Whelan Sr., and was meant as a companion to her first book.

Advocacy

After graduating, Whelan began writing on health issues for consumer magazines. She said she became increasingly concerned by the gap between scientific knowledge and public discourse on health related topics. She began writing books as a response. Panic in the pantry: facts & fallacies about the food you buy, published in 1975 and Eat OK--feel OK!: Food facts and your health, published in 1978.

After several years of writing, Whelan, along with her likewise controversial coauthor Frederick J. Stare and said that she created the American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) in 1978 as way of helping scientists reach the public. The ACSH describes itself as a consumer education consortium targeting policy issues with a large scientific component, but critics contend it has a pro-industry bias. It says that one of its goals is to use the media to bring sound science to public debates. Whelan initially invited 50 scientists to the organization. One of the first to respond and a founding director was Norman Borlaug. The ACSH reported in 2003 that it had grown to nearly 400 scientists.

Whelan continued publishing personally, as well. Some examples include The One-hundred-percent Natural, Purely Organic, Cholesterol-free, Megavitamin, Low-carbohydrate Nutrition Hoax; A smoking gun: how the tobacco industry gets away with murder; and Toxic terror, published in 1983, 1984 and 1985 respectively.

References

Elizabeth Whelan Wikipedia